Adel Abdessemed, “Telle mère tel fils”, 2008
Cube Installation / CubeStories
Location: Various
| 12th Jan 2012✧04:00101 notes
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| 17th Dec 2011✧13:08834 notes
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| 17th Dec 2011✧08:452,473 notes
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I AM
(acrylic, mixed media)by Kiam Marcelo Junio
Installation shot by Heidi Norton—-
The “I AM” project is a movable street installation made of mirrored acrylic sheets, and installed with post-its and a pen. When installed in public, passersby can stop and see their reflection, and write on a post-it to leave behind.
So far, I have installed it in 5 different locations around Chicago, and have gotten different responses that run the gamut from serious (I AM: “proud to have come this far with no clue”), funny (I AM: “too sober for this”) and romantic (I AM: “so in love with him” “and I with her!”). Some posts even elicited responses from others: (I AM: “awesome” “more awesome than that guy”), or reflect the current economic state (I AM: “unemployed” “me too”).
I find interactive art to be the most engaging, and for so long, it had been my intent to create pieces that elicit responses from others. While living in Spain, I had a large plank of wood in my living room, my “Inspiration Wall” on which my friends and visitors (often Couchsurfers from over 15 countries), could write, draw, glue, and express what inspires them. The “I AM” project stems from this same idea, of sharing an internal reflection with the external world.
During the critique for my work, a lot of topics were brought up that I plan to consider when taking the project further.
* Color selection - whether or not each location should be color-coded with regards to post-its, perhaps limiting one location with one color; placement of the work.
* Placement/location - consider what is more important: seeing people’s interaction with the work, or what they write. Too often, people will write only passing statements, nothing that reveals their true state. No one wants to confess or spill their emotional content in public. Furthermore, where should I be in relation to the work?
* Collecting/archiving - I have various stills from each location, but my classmates all seemed to agree that video documentation would be much more effective. In this case, where should I be in relation to the work? How will I get a video of people interacting, writing on the post-its if I’m trying to be inconspicuous? My previous approach was to sit in a restaurant or cafe across the street. Is this still the best approach?
* Installation - my idea is to keep the actual piece as a street installation. Having it in a gallery setting seems to take it out of context, and gives it a formalized structure that I don’t intend. On a gallery wall, the “I AM” project looks cold and unwelcoming. The reflections would be that of a gallery space, rather than the street, people, and the moving, bustling life of the city. In the future, only the documentation would exist in a gallery setting. The actual “I AM” project would only exist outside.I plan to continue the project. If you live in the Chicago area, keep your eyes open!
Brazilian artist Ernesto Neto’s exhibit at the Faena Arts Center in Buenos Aires.
(via themissionvision)
| 3rd Dec 2011✧23:09199 notes
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| 2nd Dec 2011✧17:4212,798 notes
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Arnaud Lapierre - “Ring” installation in Place Vendôme, Paris
french designer arnaud lapierre has created ‘ring’, a series of mirrored cubes placed in a circular pattern in collaboration with AUDI. the vast amount of reflections and angles warps the perspective of the surrounding area. the optical effect creates a surreal environment in which both the structures and people are distorted and recreated, fracturing the usual relationship that individuals have with the piazza as well as themselves. overall, the installation measured 5500 x 4000 mm (216 x 157 inches).
the ‘ring’ installation was on show at place vendôme, paris, at the 2011 foire internationale d’art contemporain (FIAC).
“Your rainbow panorama” of the Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Eliasson. The new project was opened on the 28th of May 2011 on the top of the ARoS Aarhus Kunstmuseum.
| 30th Oct 2011✧20:28570 notes
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Atelier Havoc Milk by FLATarchitects